PR4-5 seems to be the average or where the majority is anyway.. and once again that's me.. just average.
PR sure isn't as easy to get as it use to be. My sites are 5's but seriously doubt i'll get a six before easter.
It does get quite a bit harder to move up. I finally got two of my PR6's to a PR7, after around 9 months. I know Digitalpoint has been at around PR7 for atleast a year- though it seems he is moving to an 8 in the next update.
The real bummer from this latest update has been sifting through links pages looking for oportunites... very few pr5 links pages left in my neighbourhoods, many have gone to PR3.
That's one of the reasons I wouldn't be unhappy if Google stopped posting PR altogether. Stop looking for PR5 pages and start looking for pages which are on topic for your websites and provide a useful resource for your visitors -- if they rank well in the search results, that's a bonus but it shouldn't be your primary criterion.
I agree with you minstrel. For as long as I can remember I have included links which are PR4+ now I have changed my tactics to link to themed sites which are good resources for my visitors and sites which appear to be maintained regularly - so it's a webmaster who cares about his site and where it ranks. Darren
I'm looking amongst on topic sites. I doubt many visitors look at links pages webmasters do. I need to get up in the serps before I'm in danger of having any great traffic on one of my sites.
I have everything from a PR 7 to PR 3 but I am of like mind that I wish G would just get rid of PR all together, it wouldnt hurt my feelings. I to am linking to pretty much any website that is themed for my industry no matter what the PR. In real estate you are not going to find to many high PR websites because there are not that many of us that have enough web savvy to even understand what PR is or how to get it.